Thursday, April 29, 2010
Let's Be a Little Romantic
I was shocked and felt inhuman when I saw the video about a homeless man, Hugo Tale-Yax, who was left to die alone. This tragedy reminds me of Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley. The society alienates the monster because of his appearance. Yes, the monster may have a disproportionate figure, but he is "benevolent and good" (Shelley 73). Likewise, Tale-Yax was homeless, but he was also a human being like the rest of us.
Through the Romantic era, Mary Shelley sent her message and her thoughts in her writing. For the rest of us, let's be a little romantic. By this, I mean: care about other people without any judgment of who or what they are.
"All men are created equal." - Thomas Jefferson
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Frank in Stain

Part One
by DMS
According to Isaiah Berlin, Romantic movement writers often associated with or "connected with the sense of uniqueness, the profound emotional introspection, the sense of the differences of things, dissimilarities rather than similarities" in ideas in their writings (Berlin, Isaiah. The Root of Romanticism. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1999.) This means that Romantic writers speak their opinions; they say that in society people tend to accept and idealize commonalities, as we can see in Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley. She describes or perhaps shows her argument when she creates the monster character in her novel. Mary Shelley describes the monster as a disproportionate figure, about eight feet tall, with scary looks. Because of his dissimilar appearance, people outcast him from the society.
Let's take a look for a moment. As we know, the monster has a human figure: he has two eyes, two hands, two legs, hair, and a nose. He has no tail and speaks a language that people speak, and his words can easily be understood by common people. Now, comes the question: Why do people in society not accept the monster because of the way he looks? It is apparent that, as a Romantic writer, Shelley speaks her mind through Frankenstein. Through the monster's voice, Shelley says, "Let him [people in society] live with me [who has uncommon or rather deformed looks] in the interchange of kindness" (Shelley 111). Shelley suggests that people should live with acts of kindness without harsh judgment of their appearances.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Paradise Lostenstein, the sequel

Opposites don't attract

Victor Guiltenstein

Paradise Lostenstein: God and Adam, God and Satan

Point-Conterpoint

R.Walton's journey of discovery to find the North Pole passage is ironically opposite in intent of that of V.Frankenstein's own journey to the same place.
In Walton's case, optimistically adventourous and hopeful journey to open new horizons and to find an illuminating new discovery for the world... a sort of beginning and opening of a new frontier.
In Frankenstein's case, it is journey for closure, not opening. He wishes to destroy and end the path of destruction of his creature upon mankind and his world. One journey is bright and hopeful, the other one is dark and tormented.
By Jeongah Kim
Thursday, April 8, 2010
I Am an Adam, Too

By DMS
I was trying to work on my Frankenstein paper in my school library when a Campus News newspaper invited me to caress her. It was an article that caught my attention called Adjuncts Are People, Too, by Darren Johnson. The story allured my interest; it was descriptive and emotional.
My point is, I believe that Darren Johnson’s article is in fact expressing an aspect of Romanticism. Darren Johnson shows emotional thought in his writing. His voice is so open and clear, as if he were talking through his lungs in front of me. He says, “At first, I thought I’d be a shoo-in for a full-time job. I knew the college, knew the students, had a fine record in the field, nice faculty evaluation, didn’t really rock the boat. But I’d never get an interview, even though it was in the union contract that I was supposed to.” He thought that because he was an adjunct at the school he would get an interview and get a full-time job there. But he did not get either the interview or the job.
Darren Johnson’s desperation is similar to the scene in Frankenstein in which Frankenstein’s creature expresses his feelings to Victor. Mary Shelley states, “I ought to be thy Adam; but I am rather the fallen angel, whom thou drivest from joy for no misdeed.” The creature wants to receive good treatment from Victor Frankenstein, but he gets bad deeds instead.
Both stories reflect Romantic ideas; both writers express their emotional thoughts through their writings.
